Category: effort preference
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Calls for Retraction of Absurd “Effort Preference” Claims from NIH Study
In February, the journal Nature Communications published the US National Institutes of Health’s long-awaited paper, “Deep phenotyping of post-infectious myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome.” The study included 17 ME/CFS patients, along with 21 healthy controls. The paper immediately triggered howls of protest for a number of reasons, and in particular for the controversial claim at its…
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Some Things I Read This Week–Scathing “Effort Preference” Analysis; Kids with Long Covid; National Academies’ Long Covid Definition
An in-depth pushback on “effort preference” When the U.S. National Institutes of Health’s long-delayed “deep phenotyping” study of a handful of ME/CFS patients was released earlier this year, the focus on a weird construct called “effort preference” sucked up all the attention–in part because the paper placed it front and center, in part because no…
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An Interview with Neuroscientist Michael VanElzakker about the Just-Published and Long-Awaited NIH Study
So, okay…The big enchilada from the US National Institutes of Health’s seven-year, $8-million, under-recruited and over-hyped study—”Deep phenotyping of post-infectious myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome”–was published last week in Nature Communications. It would be fair to describe the ensuing public debate over this massive text-and-data dump as spirited. (NIH press release here; articles in The New…